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Updated: Aug 16 2017

Hereditary Spherocytosis

Snap Shot
  • A 17-year-old Norweigan presents with RUQ pain. Ultrasound reveals a calculi present in the gallbladder. Physical exam shows mild splenomegaly. Her labs show a mild normocytic anemia with an elevated reticulocyte count. Peripheral blood smear shows that many of her RBCs have no area of central pallor. Direct antiglobin test is negative.
Introduction

  • An autosomal dominant intrinsic hemolytic anemia (defect in RBCs)
  • Caused by a deficiency in spectrin in the RBC membrane
    • leads to fragility
    • cells have a spheroid shape due to the lack of spectrin
    • get lysed in the spleen by macrophages
  • Most common cause of inherited hemolytic anemia in Northern Europeans
  • Always suspect extravascular (may be intrinsic or extrinsic) hemolysis, especially hereditary spherocytosis in
    • young patients with gallstones, anemia, and splenomegaly
Presentation
  • Presents with 
    • normocytic, hemolytic anemia
    • jaundice
    • childhood gallstones
      • pigmented
    • splenomegaly
  • Ocasionally patients develop severe anemia, termed an "aplastic crisis"
    • almost always caused by a parvovirus
Evaluation
  • Diagnosis is facilitated by the presence of a family hisotry
  • Labs
    • elevated indirect bilirubin
    • direct antiglobulin test (Coombs test) is negative
    • elevated reticulocyte count indicates increased turnover of RBCs in response to hemolysis
    • CBC shows decreased MCV and increased MCHC 
  • RBC osmotic fragility test
    • spherocytes lyse easier than normal RBCs
  • Peripheral blood smear shows spherocytes (not schistocytes)
    • lack central pallor and are smaller and rounder than normal red cells
Differential
  • Must be distinguished from autoimmune hemolysis, which also has spherocytes
    • autoimmune hemolysis is Coombs positive
      • note it is also osmotically fragile
Treatment
  • Folic acid 
  • Splenectomy for severe disease
  • Prophylactic immunization against S. pneumonia, H. influenzae, and N. meningitidis (encapsulated organisms)
Question
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